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Author Topic: Week of August 19 - Tribune Letter to Editor  (Read 3113 times)
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« on: August 19, 2007, 06:12:46 PM »

[Ed. note:  The Chicago Tribune published a letter from victim's rights advocate Jennifer Bishop-Jenkins in opposition to the parole of Bill Hierins.  Our IPT member Bill Ryan, publisher of Stateville Speaks, wrote a rebuttal letter to the editor which was NOT published by the Tribune.  Here is his letter, unfortunatley only one side of this issue was reflected in the Letters to the Editor.]

Letter to the Editor
Chicago Tribune
435 N. Michigan
Chicago, Il 60611
Dear Editor
 
 
Subject: Response to Jennifer Jenkins letter

Re: Bill Hierens, Parole


Dear Editor,

I read Jennifer Bishop Jenkins's letter (August 11, 2007) regarding Bill
Hierens. Hierens will be eighty years old in November, is bedridden with
diabetes, and has been a model prison since he was convicted 61 years ago for a
horrible crime that resulted in the deaths of three people. Although Hierens has
maintained his innocence, courts have reaffirmed the conviction.

Illinois effectively ended parole in 1978 except for a small number of
offenders, including Heirens and about 300 others, so-called C#s who were
sentenced to indeterminate sentences. The goal of indeterminate sentencing was
to establish a minimum and maximum sentence and provide an opportunity for
offenders to reform and prove to a prison review board that they were no longer
a threat to public safety. Heirens has met the criteria established by the older
system but has been denied parole.

Indeterminate sentencing was, as Jenkins writes, deeply flawed and frequently
racist in its application. But the present system hardly addresses those
inequities. Indeed, we are much worse off now. The reasonable goal of correcting
the arbitrariness and racism of indeterminate sentences has given way to
inflexible sentencing graphs and fixed-term punishments, which have curtailed
judicial discretion and produced longer sentences (which continue to impact
black communities more than white ones). This was not the intent of the
progressive efforts that first agitated against indeterminate sentencing. In the
1970s, mainstream parties used studies outlining the challenges of the
penal-welfarism system, like that of the American Friends Committee, to simply
cut educational, therapeutic, and parole programs. We continue to struggle with
these uncivil developments.

Right now, the Illinios Prison Review Board annually approves parole for about
5% of the C#s who apply, and 6% of th ose who have been paroled reoffend. This
compares to an approximately 60% recidivism rate for others who leave prison.
There is no system for parole or sentence adjustment for other prisoners.

Illinois has 46,000 individuals in a prison system that is costly, overcrowded,
with overworked staff and no relief in sight. About 10% of the prisoners are age
50 or older, and this number will skyrocket in the next years because of rigid,
inflexible sentencing laws. Researchers in the field of Corrections consider
prisoners to be "elderly" at the age of 50 due to the increased stress in
prison, inadequate medical care, and health problems before prison. The costs of
maintaining the elderly in prison is three times what is costs for others. In
Illinois that is about $70,000 a year. It would be prudent to examine an
alternative to keeping elderly men and women who are not a public threat in
prison. For example, if 100 of the 4,500 e lderly earned release, taxpayers would
save $7 million annually. Study after study has demonstrated that the elderly
are much less likely to reoffend than any other group. In a Pennsylvania study
less than 2% of elderly who had served 25 years reoffended, none for a crime
against a person.

I am the chair of Citizens for Earned Release (CER) that will be advocating for
Elderly Sentence Adjustment legislation. This legislation would provide an
opportunity for prisoners who have reached age 50 and have served 25 consecutive
years to demonstrate in a variety of ways that she/he is reformed and no longer
a threat to public safety. The petitioner will also document relevant medical
conditions and have an opportunity to participate in Restorative Justice
programs. Victims families will receive timely notification and be kept informed
about the process. Elderly Sentence Adjustment is not for everyone nor should it
be. This is a very small step toward addressing inflexible sentencing laws. Men
and women who have reformed themselves, are accountable, and have paid a price
for their actions should be provided an opportunity to earn sentence adjustment.
Democratic systems should work on the principal of minimum restraint, exerting
the least force necessary to maintain safety. Forcing elderly people, often with
chronic and debilitating conditions, to die in prison is not using the least
necessary force.

It is excessively cruel.


Bill Ryan
Chair, Citizens for Earned Release
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Schrader42
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« Reply #1 on: August 19, 2007, 07:33:18 PM »

That is a great letter!  Was there a reason why the Tribune didn't publish it or did they just sweep it under the rugs like they do when they want to dodge a "right" reason?
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« Reply #2 on: August 19, 2007, 10:22:47 PM »

There has to be a way to get this into some part of that paper!  Or into another large publication....I'm sorry but Ms. Bishop needs to be realistic here..holding onto this grudge forever is no way to live a person's life...it certainly doesn't bring her family member back! Mr. Heirins is indeed incapable of further crimes and has paid his debt to society, he has served almost a person's lifetime!...he should not have to pay this debt according to a certain victim's advocate group...they will want him to serve indefinitely...what good can this possibly do, to keep him imprisoned?  Awful crime, yes.  Making the rules about release as you go along...totally unfair!
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« Reply #3 on: August 20, 2007, 09:32:30 AM »

There has to be a way to get this into some part of that paper!  Or into another large publication....I'm sorry but Ms. Bishop needs to be realistic here..holding onto this grudge forever is no way to live a person's life...it certainly doesn't bring her family member back! Mr. Heirins is indeed incapable of further crimes and has paid his debt to society, he has served almost a person's lifetime!...he should not have to pay this debt according to a certain victim's advocate group...they will want him to serve indefinitely...what good can this possibly do, to keep him imprisoned?  Awful crime, yes.  Making the rules about release as you go along...totally unfair!
Not sure if can it printed but worth a try. I will revise a bit and send to some other newspapers.
bill ryan
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« Reply #4 on: August 21, 2007, 11:21:53 PM »



Gooooooooooooooo  Bill

Thanks for all you do for inmates &*&
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« Reply #5 on: August 24, 2007, 03:03:45 AM »

The paper didn't print it because they are good liberals and didn't like being labeled racists or being accused of holding out for a racist policy. The fact of the matter is they are no different than any other publication on either side, you steeped on their toes and exposed one of their sacred cows as being a turkey. Logic has nothing to do with a hot button issue like letting a "dangerous killer" out of prison. If nothing else, the sheer cost of it will either make them come to their senses or go on a building spree like California did, the problem is that Illinois does not have near the recourses or revenue that Cal. does. In the mean time it gets more and more crowded and the services get worse and worse. The medical situation in all of IDOC is about to hit critical mass, what happens when they get sued for letting someone die? It will happen. Good letter.
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« Reply #6 on: August 24, 2007, 11:36:21 AM »

Bill, thank you for all you do for inmates.   Your defense of those inmates who have quietly
served their time and those who maintain their innocence is commendable.  You are truly
a friend of the prisoner.  That is clearly expressed in your letter.  God bless you.  Momm316
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